HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1900-11-16, Page 66
THE HErRO.N
EXPOSITOR
NOVEMBER 16, 1900
ABS
1 ,
TE
RITY.
Cenuine
Crater's
Little iver
Must S
ar Signature of
nine Wrapper Below.
411.11•1111111MMEW
See Fac -S
Teal *mail and as easy
to take 1,8 sugar..
FOR NEAOACHL
FOR DIZZINESS
FOR BILIOUSNESS.
FOR TORPID LIVER'.
FOR:CONSTIPATION.
FOR SALLOW SKIL,
1FOR THECORWLEXION
frail I Purety erectable:
.• jiriallia•;riefli MUST NMI MATUR
deV•14
CARTEKS
LITTLE.
iVER
L
CURE 51
OK HEADACHE.
V.ET ERIN A RY
Tone' GRIEVE, VS., honor graduate of Ontario
O Veterinary Cottage. A !diseases of Domesti
animals treated, alio promptly attended to an
charges moderate, "eterinary Dentstry a specialty.
Office and reeidence on Goderich street, ono door
Esti of Dr. Scott'e of oe, Seaforth. 111241
LEGAL
JAMES L. KILLORAN,
-Barrister, Solloitoe Conveyancer and Notary
-Public. Money to to n. Office over Piokard's Store
Main Street, Seafort 1628
R. HAYS,
Barrieter, Solicitor, onveyancer and Notary Public.
Soliettor for tho Dominion Bank. Offi"e-in rear of
Dominion Bank, Searth. Money to loan. 1235
J
M, BEST, Bar`rister, Solicitor, Conveyancer,
d . Notary Public. Offices up stairs, over C. W.
Papst's bookstore. 1(1: -.in Strea, Seaforth, Ontario.
1627
IIENRY BEATTIE, Barrister, Solicitor,- &o
Money to loan. Offiee-Oady's Block, Sea.
forth. 1679-tf
ri ARROW & GAP,
Cor. Ilami.ter(
1676
OW, Barristers, Solicitors, &e.
St. and Square, Goderich, Ont,
J. T. (lAnaow, Q. C.
CHARLES CLAPLOW, L. L. B.
CCOTT & McKENZEE, Barristereo;Solloitors, etc.,
°Linton and BaySeici. Clintoni Office, Elliott
block, leaac street. Bayfield Wilde, open every
Thursday, Main street, tiret door west of post office.
Money to loan. Jainee Scott & E. IL McKenzie.
1598
•
• HOLMESTED, ettooessor to the late firm of
2 „ MoCaughey & Holrueelted, Barrister, Solicitor
Conveyancer, and Notaiy • Solicitor for the Can
action Bank of Connteoreo. Money to lend. Farm
for eel°. 0f113,3 in Sootb's Blpok, Main Street
teeforth.
DE NTISTRY.
BELDEN, D. D. S
•
DENTIST.
Room over the Dunibicti liatic, 3lain Street
1691-tf
Seaforth.
W, TWEDDLE, Bruesels, Dentist, (formerly of
Seaforth,) Graduate of R. C. D. S., Toronto.
Post gradnate coeree n crow n and bridge work at
flaskiles School, 01 league Office over A. R.
Smith's store, Brintee . - 10604f
DR. F. A. SELLERX, Dentist, graduate of the
Royal•Colloge o Dental Surgeons, Toronto, also
honor graduate of Dciattinent of Dentletry, Toronto
Univareity. s0ff1c0 Pi the Petty 'block, Hensall.
Will visit Zurich ever,- Monday, oommenoing Mon-
day, June lat. 1587
D4.11. R. ROSS, Dentiet (euocessor to F. W.
Tweddle), graduate of Royal College of Dental
Surgoone of 0:11..1,63 first class honor graduate of
Toronto UnIvere:ty ; crown and bridge work, also
gold work in all its forme. All the most modern
methods for painless ti_ling and painless extraotion of
teeth. All operaticne carefully performed. 3 Moe
Tweddle's old stand, o, er DilVe grocery, Seaforth.
1640
MEDICAL-.
Dr. John McGinnis,
Ilen.r.ir.fduat" Loa tor Weatern University, member
of' Onterio Collo." cif Physicians and Surgeons.
Office elid Reeitien.e"-rorinerly, occupied by Mr. Wm.
Pickard, Victoria Stre 31, next to the Catholic Church
fifICI8 Lit Calla atteodo 1 promptly. 1463x12
A W. 'IOWAN!, M '
. D. C. M., Honor Graduate
and Yellow of ' rinity Medical College, Ora -
duet(' of Trinitr tit rify, 3lember of ;College of
Pity. eletwre, and Sure .0 is of Ontario, Conetance, On-
tario. Office Rate:est ceupied by Dr.Ceoper. 1650
A LEX. BETHUNE:, M. D., Fellow of the Royal
_AL. College 'of Physt, tens end Surgeons, Ringsten.
finecteesor to Dr. .1131-Ald. Offiek lately °coupled
• Dr. Macklii,Mei-. Street Sesforth. Residence
ete
-Corner of Viela Ar8 In houwe lately ocoupled
L. E. Dancley. 1127
- - —
D. F, J.
.be reeldeut PkyCLOLAil
erai Hoepited. Honor
member of the 0ol1ag-3
ef Ontario-. Coroner
Office.; end Reeid"re.e -0
adetuodiet Chur.it 11
E U -R ROWS„
and Surgeon, Toronto Gen-
raduato Trinity University,
f Physicians and Surgeon
or tho County of Huron.
"derieh Street, East of the
phone 46.
1380
DRS. SCO T & MacKAY,
PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS,
Sodertch street, oppaeib. Methodiet church,Seaforth
3. G. SCOTT, iirtoria and An Arbor, and
(r.enther Ontare" College of Physiolana snd
Surgc one. Caron s.c for County of Huron.
0. IdarKil V, honlr g aluate Trinity- University,
gold znedaliet Tricia.. • _Medical College. Member
College of Phy31la and Surgeons, Ontario.
1483
racKiriop ctory for 1900.
JAMES LOCK ItART, Rt e, Seaforth P. 0.
ALEX. GARDINER, 1,, "-uncillor Leadburv P 0
JOIN G, GRIEVE, 'ou ciflor, Winthrop P. 0
JAMES 0- LAI GU Beechwood P. 0
ItItts.tdl, Couneillor, Seaforth 1'.0
JOHN C. MORRIS•ils, 0 erl, Winthrop P. 0 ,
DAVID M. ROss, Treast rel.-, Winthrop P. 0.
WILLIAM EVEN" A,e.c eer, Beechwood P. 0.
CHARLES DODDS, volt' .tor, Seaforth P. 0.
RICIIA.RD POLLARD, Sanitary Inept:der, Lad.
bury P. 0.
Eureka
(3.,‘ (C!
.A Iarliable and e tried
Splints, Se'to. in
ft ean ui1 in
where Stientlatit.g Lie an
&elle_ 1. S( pan:phiet r
bottle. It has no sup,-rlo-
guaranteed Co gi,e eat: ere
Sold dniegists.
of Lerlip .I.rw
Prepered
Remedy for Curbs,
Sweeny, Etc.
of Vetesioary Preetiee
nts or 1-1.iitere are prt•
• Ilia" acedinpanies every-
. Every lottle .sold i3
ion. Price- 760 a bottle.
'Liable in the trzatment
e Pamphlt t.
• TILE '; • YARY MEDECINE CO.,
1,eedon 'Ont. 1694 62
JOSIAH AND I GO A --
BY JObIAII ALLEN'S WIFE," IN THE LADIES'
HOME JOURNAL,
We arrove at the Widder Twitchell's
about six p. no, she that was Barbara
Smithe my cousin on my cawn side. She
married a minister, a rider of the Confer-
ence. He rode on it till he died, then he
got off.- He was a good man, with lots of
-property. He didn't ride th Conference
from needecessity ; he rid fro choice.
Barbara took advice, investe. her money
to good advantage and laid up intereet
every year, besides well, ducatin' her
girtBarbara up high, and havi ' all the lux-
uries of life and a hired gir. . The girl,
Serintha Green, I used to go t school with,
but, hadn't seen her for year and years.
Barbara -Bab, as they call her -is just
home from boardin' school, an I see that
her mother kinder stood in a e of her, as
mothers will sometimes of a right young
girl full of lite and spirits and accomplish -
melees. But they are both p rfect ladies,
delicate and dainty and nice as they eau be.
Bab had only got home the d y before we
arrove there. She had been away from
home for three years, and Ise that there
wuz lots of things that didn't uite suit her
around the house, theugh she'uv too lady-
like to come right out and say so.
I. had noticed at the supper able a tall,
defiant lookin' woman, with a g een wooeted
dress on, and she wuzn't wha you might
call a ornament to the table because her
dress wuz all flour on the Wain . They had
warm biscuit for supperran4 •oney, and I
learned afterward that she had spilled some,
honey on to the front of the *bit before
she made the biscuit, and thn the -flour
'stuck. I mistrusted that she veuz the hired
girl ; they didn't introduce me, but I gee
Miss Twitohell begin to open her mouth,
and thenshe ketched Bab' i eye and closed
it agin.
But I miatrusted it wuz Serintha Green. ,
She looked ciretful oncomfortable settin' up
straight to the table, feelin' awful about the
looks of her waist, I knew, for she :WI=
naterally neat. But truly she wuzn't to
blame, for she had had to hurry the supper
on account of Bab's bo, a young college
professor ; he had -to ketch the train, and
Serintha tryin' to do her duty had outdone
herself and had no time to change her dress.
So ahe sot there with her face red as blood.
Bab and the young man wuz talkin' about
litertoor and things, and Miss Twitchell
and Josiah and I talkin's about old time,
dideray to Serintha, out of politeness that
" it looked like a spell of weather," and she
said "yes." AnclaM.iss Twitchell spoke to
her once- on politics; and Serintha glared
at her dretful. Miss Tevitehellbein' flue-
trated had forgot that Serintha awuz a rag
in' Democrat, and Miss Twitchell is on the
otheaside. But the reason why we all on
us wuz flustrated wuz, we had to all on us
be a-walkin' round so mueh. Seven times
Serintha had to get up and, ge into the
pantry for things; she had hurried, so that
she had forgot to set the table as it ort to
be. The chninaroom bein' small, and Serin
tha, bein' so hurried, had mot the table too
fur back against the wall, and every time
she riz up the young professor and Bab
would have to move their chairs 1 to let her
out, and then move again to 10 - her in.
Why, it made things fairly turbulent, and I
see Bea's face get redder and redder every
minute, and she would give kindek reproach-
ful irnplorin' looks to her mother, and her
mother 'would look kinder apoligizin' and
appealin' toward her, and pitifulland plead.
in' toward Serintha, as if she was between
two firee. I --.
Well, after supper wee over and we all
felt relieved when the agony wuz passed)
Bab took the professor to the 'train, and
Miss Twitchell wuz sent for by a neighbor
whose child was suffering voylent with
.colic, and at my request, she went for a little
while, though she didn't want to ;I and hav•
in' got five or six spots of mud on my man-
tilly, I went out into the •kitchen after Miss
Twitchell wuz gone to see if I °quid wash
out the spots with cold water and press
'em.
Serintha put the flatiron on and gin me
the water and sponge, but with a' cold, de -
tient air, and all the while she looked baba
&fent at me, and finally she brpke the sil•
ence by sayin' in a loud, sourvOicel:
" My mother owned a pongee •dress with
pure silk stripes in it add 6 black silk
calae and a real woosted work -bag."
See, I gently rubbin' the spot, " Nobody
disputes it."
And jest as I tackled the aeconctspot she
sez : "1 am -as good as Miss Twitchell or
any of her visitors! My father's nude wuz
a forehanded man."
I didn't say, nothin' to dispute her, but
,kepl' to work at my mantilly-, and he con-
tinued on : " My sister had a. dircassion
maritally with tabs that come down to her
feet."
13E-2 I, mildly : "As Idon't putl on any
airs over my mantilly, Serintha, it don't
mortify!me to know that your familYewned
one with longer tabs." • •
" You do pat On erre !" sez Ede comiti' out
" Why, Serintha Green ;" sez I rubbin'
on the third spot. " I hide% put Ma an air,
not a single sir." s
" Well, youhave felt 'ern if yoa hadn't
put. 'em on ; you feel above me becanse I am
hired girl."
Sr'. I "Serintha, in my opinion there
no work in the world any more honorable
h
an to make a comfortable home. Have I
Serintha, as I felt above you ?"
is
t.
a
" No, but I know you felt it, and; we V7UZ
.girls together, and I hain't a doubt hut you
feel above me because yoa have got; a home
and a husband." -
" Hasbands, Serintha see I, es I at-
tacked the fourth spot, arid my tone wuz
mild. for I pitied her, " husband e .fain't
trothin' to feel hauty or conceited over, if
you look, at 'em wieh the eye of a filosoph-
er." See I solemnly : " They are diaPera
sations of Providence, Serintha, and are to
be used as such."
" I Inaew that you would feel above me
.37.e,A3Thems-AwitnA2r.TALMITAMiatar/AMOGRverrElMeiTIMIS.
Dizzy Spells
and Headache
Weak, Nervous, and Run Down, Would
Shake: with Nervousness -A Terrible
Case --,A Remarkable Cure.
Mrs. Chas. H. Jones, Pierceton,
writes: -"For years I . have been a
great "stifferer with my; hae.rt and
nerves. X would take shaking spells and
• a dizzy, !swimming feeling wOuld come
over me, Night atter night I would
never close nay eyes, and my head
would ache n9 though It would burst.
At last I had to keep to my bed, and
tqaough my doctoe attended me from
fall until- spring, his medicine did not
help me.
"1 have . now taken five boxes of
Dr: Chase's Nerve Food, and. It has
done me more good than I ever believed
a medicine could do. Words fail to ex-
press my grati tilde for the wonderful
cure broughtse.e.bout by this treat-
ment."
Dr. Chase's Nerve Food makes •pale,
weak, nervous men, women, and chil-
dren strong, healthy, and happy. In•
pill form, a0 cents a box, at all- dealers,
or Edmanson, Bates & Co., Toronto.
One
rrom a wreck 4
attention to the
life-saving be col
very soon it attra
If the scene of
by that life-savin
Golden. Medical
Discovery, coeds
be made to sten
out alone, like
picture on a
screen, it woule
attract the notic
of the whole na
tion.- By a curl
ous contredictio
the very frequen
cy with which tie
"Discovery" save
life, robs the fac
of general inter
est. For obstinat
coughs, bronchitis
weak lungs, an
other diseases o
the respiratory or
gansi• "Goldei
Medical Discov
ery" is the on
medicine which
offers certain help
and almost certai
cure. It contain
neither al co h o
nor narcotics.
',Only for Docto
Pierce's Golden Med
ical Discoveryl thin.
I would be in my
Moses Miles, of Hill
11I had asthma so ba
compelled to give u
lungs so that I coug
and night. My friel
sumption. , My wif
Golden Medical Dis
bottles and am now
pounds -thanks to
The People's C
Adviser in paper
receipt of 31 one -
cost of customs a
dress Dr. R. V. Pi
fro.comerrpocralwilaimmaftwet
11 aved
ill attract
ife-saver.
tinued ev
ts :no pub
he &Fain
r remedy,
the vs Orld 's
Yet let the
ry day, and
ic attention.
of one life
Dr. Pierce's
rave to -day," writes Mr.
ard, Uinta 0o., Wyoming.
I Could not sleep at d was .
work. It affected my
ed all the time, both day
ds all thought I had On -
insisted on my trying ,
overy.' I have taken lour .
a well man, weigh' ig 185
r. Pierce.”
minon Sense Medical
covers, is sent free on
ent stamps to pay the
d mailing only. Ad-
rce, Buffalo, N. Y.
A-47.1111warrtiormit,", WAIVE
before you come.he e, and I wue lookin' out
for it." -
See. I : ." That's t e way Mormons prove
their doctrines out of the Bible, and the
Cariemelites ; they read it' trYin' to find
proofs for their beli fs ; that is the way you
read me."
"'Welled am as ood as anybody, and I
want it understood lain that I am. I see
that you've got y ur buniaet fixed over ,•
mebby you think th tr you are better than I
am because you've got a better lookin'
bunpet, but I've see the day that I- could
wear as good•looki ' bunnets as anybody
that went into Jone ville meetin' house,. and
I ani just as good n•w as I ever wuz, and I
feel fully equal to anybody, even if they
have. got new btu nets or bunnets fixed
over as good as new."
Sez I : " I don't- rise no heights on my
bunnet, Serintha; I don't stand up or. it at
all."
"1 don't work ou because I am obliged
to ; I come to Miss `witehell'sto accommo•
date her. I am as ood as any elder's wife
in th_e Conference, a d if I can't eat to the
table I'm goin' to le ve."
She was remembe in' the honey and flour,
and I seen that the iortificatjon hed struck
in. Ste she : "1 sot there in perfect
agony lookin' like fury, all stuck up with
flour, and Miss Bab, in her white dreier and
laces, she knew that I felt as if I would go
down through the floor every minute, and I
a-jumpin' up all the time and waitin' on
'ern. But I sot to the table, and will
sot to the table, and if I don't set to the
table I leave."
"Well, you sot," scz I, "and hadn't ort to
complain."
" Yes; I did !" sez she; and she sot a pie.
platedown hard. " My father always
thought he was just as good as anybody, if
he did work out by day's work for a 1 yin',
and he brought me up to think I wuz, and
he was always lookin' out, to Bee if folk felt
above him, and I am."
• " Well," se z I, "ib don't Seem to be very
appifyin' to you ; you don't eeern to enjey
yourself, Serintha."
, •
" Well, I don't ; folks are so mean and
scornful. But sometinies things ha ipen
that makes me tickled. If I wuz ever ick-
eled over anything if wuz when Bri get
Murphy left Elder Gray's. They wa eed
her to wait on table, and she told 'em it she
couldn't eat with 'em and be one of the
family alio wouldn't stay ; so she starto up
and left when there wuz two siek ones and
a house full of company.
. ",Is she doin' better now where she a ?"
sez I.
"No, not so fur as the work goes ; she
has to work twiee as hard, and she d•n't
have any conveniences, and it is onhea thy
down by the water, and they. most al aye
cheat their girls out of their wages; gut
she sets to the table with 'ern, for I see her
rnyeelf with her sleeves rolled up, and her
arms and dress all dirty right out of clea • in'
house, and her hair all toueled. I see her
in jest that ondition settin' ,to the ta le,
for they had to have a girl, and she woul n't
stay unless she could set down to the t bIe
and be one 'of the family, and they are
ledies,"
• See. 1: " Bridget's sittin' down at the
table with ladies didn't make her a lad', if
she wuzn't one in the first place. nd
Bridget couldn't stay with the family i nd
be ene of ; it wuzn't in the barge n ;
when they left the table she went into he
kitchen and they into taeeparlot. If he
could get the family to go. itito the kite on
and wash -the dishes and do her work, t at
would be worth quarrelin'l over, but he
can't. They hired her to do her work, a d
if they paid her for it, there is nothing • is -
honorable either way. They git the rest,
and she gas the pay, and the labor is jest
as honorable as the repose, and no honor-
ab
lerd'
"But she
can feel that she is jeet as good
as they be."
" She may be better than they be, but
she don't prove it in that way. Now, 88 -
ter Sylvester Bobbettand I might say that
we wuz jest 88 good as Queen Victoria, ad
no doubt we b ; we're all members of t e
meetin' house, and been married and kn w
what trouble 5 and long sufferin'. S Te
might gin out that we're goin' there for • n
'afternoon's visit the next time she holds a
reception, and take our piecin' up and knit.
Lin', and artily ut,, Miss Robbett dressed n
black alpacky with a bask and linen colla ,
and I with a dark gingham and a barr d
muslin apron.I Well, now, spozin' e
should git, in do you spoze that me
should be hap y right there in the midet
females robed iri satins and velvets, los •
necked, with Idng trains floatin' out covere
with diamonds, and all on 'ern lookin' supe
sillyous at us, and like as not pokin' fun
our crazy quilt, and servants all dressed u
in different colors and gold lace and bu
tons sailin' beck and forth and hitti
against us, and the Widder Albert go ful
ofeare and company not able to say a wor
to U8 ? How much comfort do you epee,
we thould take ? It hain't a matter o
goodness _at all, as I look at it ; it, is a mat
ter of common sense and comfort. Wh
not do what will make and 'give the moa
comfort to both parties ? • Lots of hire
girls are better than their mistresses,
hain't doubb on't, but because I like fres
air and am good enough to have it, is
any sign that I ehould go and set down o
the peak of the bare ? I am good enoug
to do it, there hain't a doubt of that, but I
shouldn't set easy, andi would be afraid of
fallin' off. I should take as much agin cam -
fort eettin' on the grou d."
I see that Serintha began to look some
softer, and I oontintred : "I believe that
that the best way to gip along is to treat the
world simply and honestly. If we are as
good as we say we are when we hain't we
are lyin'. Act friendlk and kindly to every-
body, high or low, noe puttin' on airs, and
not actin' meachina handlin our skeletons
jest as eaey as we can as we rnove 'ern from
place to place (for we }ave got to carry 'ern
1 wherever we go). Wear a posy of hearte-
ease on our bosoms, and let the world look
on that, instead of the sad heart beatin' un-
derneath•; it will be be ter for the world and
for us."
Sez Serintha. "Th flat is hot."
And she brung me d•wn from my hite of
eloquence real voyale t, but I felt kinder
encouraged about her.
Well, the last night f our stay there the
'young professor come back agin; he had
been up beyend there t visit a aunt, and he
wuz a-goin' to stay all night there to Miss
Twitchell's and go on 'ome in the morninh
And it bein' a very peasant afternoon we
had all walked over to she that wuz Karen
Smith's and it belie' real cool evenin'
when we got back we wuz cold, and there
wuzent a fire in the ho ee only in the kitch-
en, and so Miss Twitc ell, knowin' that we
wuz all in the family ( ab and the young
professor are engaged), invited us all to go
in the kitchen and wa m us before retirin'
and goin' to bed.
Serintha's kitchen w tz always clean as a
pin, so we went out an the fire wuz burn -
in so good, and it wuz so pleasant there we
sot there talkin' for quite a spell, and Bab
and her bo wuz laughi ' over some joke of
their own.
And I spoze &riot a heard our voices
and the laughin', and mistrusted that we
wuz out there in the kitchen pokin' fun at
her, and that she cou dn't stand. So she
crept down the back st irs to apply her ear
to the orack of the doo
But alas for human expectations ; how
futile they are ! Ba 's side-saddle hung
there on a nail driv u aginst the wall, and
the stirrup hanging do4vn on to the stairs,
Serintha ketched her f ot in it and fell, and
the saddle fell on to hr, and she jest bust
the door right open and come into the room
on her hands and fee1 in her long white
nightdrees and a side -s ddle on her back.
She couldn't speak. ,She wuz stunned.
And the young profess r wuz stunned, too,
and so was Bab. T ey withdrew with
speed and simeltaneo s. Miss Twitohell,
bein' given to highste icks, fell into 'em,
and for the next hour riiy hands ,and heart
wue full. My pardner brain' tired, had al-
ready retired to bed, aid not knowin' that
he could do much good in such a time as
this I let him lay.
I see that my first d ty wuz to Serintha,
for though as the poet sings she wuz "all
saddled and bridled " e e wuz not " fit for
the fray ; " not fur from it.
As I say, she was stu • ned. The fall had
jarred her insides and t1ie dretful mortifica-
tion attendin' the incident had struck in,
and for the next half ho r I stood over her,
rubbin' her with camp re and anarky, half
and hail', tacklin' the mortifieation with
reasonable' and consoli ' words, and doein'
her internal organs wit catnip and boneset.
Aleoothin' .Miss T itchell at intervals
until I got her soothed own, and then she,
top, helped rub Serinth .
Well, Serintha Gree; was bed -sick for
the next two days andlnights, and at her
request I took the moet laf the care on her.
And mebby itovas the jar of the fall, and
mebby it wuz the waterin' of the ground
with catnip and boneset' and mebby it wuz
my talk, but 'tennyrate pie good seed I had
tried to sow seemed to spring up and
flourish.
From the very minute I took the saddle
off from her, from the very minute I unhar-
neesed her, I see a °hang ; she lost that de-
fiant, mad look, and she eeemed to take
good acts as _they wuz neant to be took,
with •simple -good natu e and gratitude ;
seemed to look less on life as _ a battle
ground, and more as a pace to plant 'pod
13
seeds of kindly acts and leasant words, and
didn't seem to look out so much for fuu to
be poked at her. She seemed to be ,more
obleegin' and ready to serve, and at the
same time more self•respectina and, as is
material, more thought op.
There wee, a great chaaae for the better
in Serintha Green. felebby it wuz my talk,
and then agin, for I ani modest-mebby it
wuz the catnip.
$
THE END.
— • '
THE USEFUL ESS OF
DI ANION D DYES
In Country Hom. s is Beyond
Calculat on.
Diamond Dyes are grea blessings to every
farmer's wife. No other rticle brought in-
to country homes can gjvt such a return of
profit, pleasure and hap iness as the Dia:
mond Dyes.
A ten cent package o the world -famed
Diamond Dyes will gi e new life to any
faded and dingy dress, ek rt, jacket or cape.
From ten to twenty cents expended on Dia-
mond Dyes will enable a y one to re -color
a faded suit of clothes for any youth or mar,
and make them look like new cloths from
the. Tailor's -hands.
To get the best results rom your work of
home dyeing, do not allow any dealer to
sell you some make of oyes that he calls
JUST AS GOOD. No other package dyes
in the world equal the 1 utmond 1)yC3 in
purity, etrength and brilli ncy.
•
Justice, Mercy nd Truth.
Every person who tries o buy an article
for lessthan its proper value, or who tries
to sell it at more than its proper value -
every consumer who keeps a tradesman
waiting for his money, a d every trades-
man who bribes a consume to extravagance
by credit, is helping forwa ci, according to
his own measure of power, a system of base-
less and dishonourable oonjmeroe and forc-
ing his country down ir4to poverty and
shame. And people of mo erate means and
G- T'S
IS: ASE
is the deadliest a d most
painful malady t which
mankind is subject, Dodd's
Kidney Pills will c ire any
case of Bright's lisease.
They have never ailed in
one single case. Iheyare
the only remedy that ever
has cured it, and they are
the only remedy that can.
There are imitat ons of
Dodd's Kidney Pi Is -pill,
box and name -bo imita-
tions are dangerou . The
original and only enuine
cure for Bright's Di ease is
ODD'S
KIDN Y
ILLS
Dodd's Kidney P lis are
fifty cents a box at all
drug -gists.
average powers of mind would do far more
rea good by merely carrying out stern
principles of justice and honesty in common 1
matters of trade than by the most ingenu- '
ous' schemes of extended philanthropy or
voc ferous declarations of theological doe -
tri
t
e. There are three weighty matters of
ii
the law -justice, mercy and truth ; and of
thee the Teacher puts truth last, because
thee; cannot be known but by a course of
acts of justice and love. But men put, in
all their efforts, truth firet, because they
men by it their own opinions, and thus,
whi e the world has many people who
wo Id suffer martyrdom in the cause of
whait they call truth, it has few who will
suffer even a little inconvenience in that of
justice and mercly.-John Ruskin.
i
1 MALARIAL FEVER.
--
After Effects Leave the Victim
Weak and Depressed.
---
Mist( Emma Huskinson, a Captain in the
Salvation Army, Tells Row She Regain-
ed Health Through the Use of Dr. Wil-
liaths' Pink Pills. -
From the Sun, Orangeville, Ont.
,
Arnong the oldest and most highly re -
spec ed residents of Orangeville is Mrs.John
Hue ineon, whose daughter Emma has, for a
num er of years, been an acute sufferer from
the fter effects of malarial fever. A report-
er of the Sun, hearing of the wonderful ef-
fects which Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have
had n ,Miss Ruskinson, called at her home
to e quire into the truth of the rumor.
Afte stating the reason of his visit, he was
kind y received by Mrs. Huskinsone who
gave him the following facts of the cure
"Sone , years ago," said Mra. Huskinson,
"my daughter emma, who is now captain
of th Newmarket crops of the Salvation
Arm*, was attacked by malarial fever. She
was twer a doctor's care for a long time,
and atthough she recovered sufficiently to
go ab ut, the after effects of the fever left
her v re weak, and the doctor did not seem
able o put any life into her. She had fre-
quent headaches, was very pale, and the ,
least Xertion would greatly fatigue her.
We t ought a change might do her good,
and gonsequently she went on a visit to
Toronto. While there she was advised to
try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and at once
purchased a supply. Before she had finials -
ed the second box she noted a marked
change for the better ; her appetite im-
prove, her color returned, the feeling of
exhau tion had disappeared, and by the
time sO had taken half a dozen boxes she
was (miming the best of health, and all her
old -tithe vigor had returned. Although her
-work in the Salvatiop Army is hard and ex-
poses her to all kinds of weather, she has
since been able to do it without the least in-
convenience.
"Sortie time after mY daughter's cure I
was initeelf completely run down and to
add to my trouble, was seized witlh a severe
attack of rheumatism. Remembering the
benefit my daughter had received from Dr.
Willie' 8' Pink Pills, I decided to use them,
and be ore I had taken half a dozen boxes -I
felt ful y recovered, and have been In the
best of health ever since. My advice to all
ailing i touse Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for
Pale P ople."
Dr. illiams' Pink Pills have restored
more w ak and ailing women and girls to
robust ealth than any other medicine ever
discove ed, which in part accounts for their
popularity throughout the world. These
pills are sold by all dealers or may be had
beemail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for
$2.50, by addressingthe Dr. Williams' Medi-
cine Coe Brockville, Ont.
•
ThYoung Man's Manners.
m
Socie y asks little of a young an except
l
to beha ,e well. If he be manly in looks, if
he has good manner, is civil to his elders,
if he has any little gift of entertaining -any
"parlor tricks," -if he sends a few flowers
(mashie Ily, looks pleasant and is polite,hie
way will be smooth to success -always pro-
viding that be is really a gentleman.
He neer joins her on a thoroughfare unless
the frien ship be an established ove, and
only wit her permission -nor will he stand
and cony roe with her.
It is jrovincial to walk " sandwiched "
between wo women, to stare, or look after
any one ho has passed.
In public conveyancee a man does not pay
a woman'e,fare unless he is her escort, ex
cept in an enaergency, when he must ask if
.helnilsitay.
rod;lotions are rarely made in public
places or Conveyances.
A man precedes a! woman when entering
a theatre er public place. In a church the
lady goes'rat. He may precede her up a
public sta,irease, but in a private houee in
ascendingi and descending, he follows :
In picture -galleries, elevators in public
buildings, hotel and theatre corridors, they
being thoroughfare, a man retains his hat.
In a hotel he remover it if women are pres-
ent.
If a lade bows to a man in a restaurant he
rises slightly from his seat in acknowledge-
ment. When he is with a party, if a lady
with her escort stops to speak to his friends
he rises and remains standing until she
passes on..He also rises if a man is intro-
duced to him when with a stag party.
If a bac elor shows some little hospitality
it advance him much in favor. If he, has
attractive, ooms, or has anything to show,
he may gi re an afternoon tea or a chafing -
dish supper. Simplicity is in order. A
bachelor's entertainment is usually regard-
ed in the 1 ght of a frolic and hie efforts in-
dulgently leonsidered.
A bachelor may live where he likes with-
out loss oil social position, if he belong to
one good club, which he may only use for
the addrees on hicardsand note paper. -
October Ladies' HomeJournal.
_e_
Do You Fear Heart Failure?
No death cuiss so suddenly and unexpectedly as
that caul ed ly heart failure, but the trouble had its
beginning m nthe or perhaps years before, when the
blood becam9 thin and watery and the nerves ex-
haueted. Gij4duahly the waste has bicome more
rapid than the process of repair, the tissues of the
heart have bloom° diseased, and finally some over-
exertion or nervous ehook has caused the beating to
cease and life to depart. Dr.Chase's Nerve Food
prevents heart failure and all similar diseases by
creating new; rioh.blood and nerve force, and build-
ing up the sYetem
MontreEa, the) "Edinburgh," of
' Canada
" Montreal is the Edinburgh, Toronto
• the Glasgolw of Canada," " Should a name
coiner, suclli as Max O'Rell, try his ingenuity
with Mont eal he would doubtless christen
that splen id cosmopolitan city, raised on
the site of be little Indian village Hochel-
aga Mac d Montreal. It is inhabited by
the French businessed by the Scotch dom-
inated by t e priests, visited by the world,
and admired by all, and, as a city, is the
centre of lominerce in Canada. ' Mac ' is
(I
the most inI portisnt ingredi e - in this Hoch-
elaga hotchpotch. The magnificent, granite
buildings r mind him of bonnie Aberdeen;
and surely the tall, twisted telegraph poles
in the busy otreets are fair substitutes -for
the Scotch 3r, with the qualifying thought
that the utility is probably dearer to him
than their icturesqueness. i Montreal is the
largest of Canadian citiee; her steady growth
being due t her situation ati the junction of
St. Lawrenee and Ottawa. Here on Mount
Royal Island is the natural centre of the
commerce Of two great river basins, and
the shrewd ibusiness men of Montreal have
taken advantage of their position at the
gateway of ,trade, and have made the cur-
rent of traffic pay toll to them. At this
point steamers and sailing ships are loaded
with lumber, grain, cattle and other ex-
ports. Here come the products of other
lands for dietribution to a million or more
consumers in towns, villages and on farms.
Here, t
ecnveni
materia
manufa
portion
brought
least ini
the pr
Harry
A
PAIN
Will
It
Thou
b....44.er Shoe Polish
Many men use poor dreeeing on their shoes and whn the thee suffers
as a rezult, blame Ere taloa instead of the vandal polish.
Slater Shoe Pa.:di is made to
protect " Slater Shoes," keeps the
leather soft, pliable., healthy; pre-
vents cracking and ieeeres satis-
factory shoe service ; equally good
for ladies' and children's shoes.
Every bottle contains a coupon
good for 5 cents, on the price of
"Stater Shoes;" Price 25 cents
per bottle, and it's worth it.
Get a copy of " Leatherfood,"
a booklet telling it's history.
– ^ —
saraaalaea
1
WILLIS & SON, SOLE LOCAL AGENTS FOR SEAFORTH.
o, are great factories, built where
nt access to valions kinds of raw
Li favors cheap production and makes
turing profitable. Here comes a
of the traffic of the great lekes,
by canal and river. .And not the
portant item is the face that here
ncipal railway lines Meet." -Mr.
unties.
ORD TO THE WEAR T AND
SICKLY MOTHEi.
'S CELERY CO
fake You Happy and
POUND,
Healthy.
as Given a New I4ife to
nds of Ailing ViTo en, and
Do the Same Goo4 Work
For You.
The enicine that bite given tiew health
and a fr sh lease of life to thousands of
women n Canada, is surely the kind you
stand in need of, dear mother. i
If yo are weak, nervous, despondent,
have he dache, sideache, backache and can-
not elee well, Paine's Celery Compound
will giv you restful nights, good appetite,
freedom from aches and pains, and restore
lost etre gth and vitality. The most suc-
cessful f mily physicians are now freely pre-
scribing Paine's Celery Compound for sleep -o
less, ner ous and rundown women. Laura
Garland Crawford Steeet, Toronto, says:
"You Paine's Celery Compound has most
wonderf Ily improved my health. Before
using it y appetite was poor-aimost gone;
I was al o weak and debilitated, and (miler -
ed sever ly from pains in:the head. Paitte's
Celery C.mpound certainly does all that is
•claimed or it. I have recommetided ip to
my frien s, and they all speak highly of the
results eceived from it. J wish Pai e's '
Celery C mpound the suecess it so richly
deserves"
Luckily there are a large number of young
men sensible. enough and plain enough to
make faithful employees, but too 'many of
the wrong sort get employment in Our bilk.
news houses.
If a young man extravagantly I dressed
should seek employment from me he would
not get it. I would send him away with
some good advice. This foolisbness of
dress makes his chance of -succeeding in
business very poor.
The taste which leads a boy to indulge in
such extravagances is liable to lead him
sooner or later to do dishonest things. Her
ought not to be trusted in a positioe of re-
eponsibility. My advice to all young men,
though, is to keep clean and wholeeeme, to
dress plainly and *how that you liaise good
Their ridiculous dress more than elnything
else proves that our young men need some
one to keep them in check. I have no
-I doubt that some of them spend three
months' salary on fancy drees clothes and
. before they half wear them out buy new
ones. Some run into debt for the sake of
fancy neckties, fancy shirts, fancy silk
socks silk undervvear, and all that. It he
positively criminal. j Such boys are apt to
make dangerous citizens.
Some of our young men Areas ridieulously
• enough during the whole year, but when
the warm weather comes our youeg men
seem trying to rival the flowers. It'isa mis-
take.
•
C ina's Secret
China is honey comb
cieties. Most of them
the gove nment and are
while so 0 are simply fri
mutual b nat-like the
fellows i Britain-othees, of
Hung Le gue is the meet impo
oldest, h ve fot their acknowled
the overt row of the Manchu clyn
with ansi horror are they' looked
authoriti s that the penalty for
ship is • eath. Branches of
League, • escape persecution, do
ly avow heir connection with it,
known b a watchword, And this
" Great nife " is one that he
being use by branches of the Lea
Societies.
d with secret so-
re pers euted by
°stile tol it. But
ndly so ieties for
orester or 03d-
5
1
k Some young men attempt to excuke their
fancy drees by saying that theyant to
make a good appearance and associa e with
thiehigh-toned rich people in the hope that
they nisty make a favorable impression and
thus gee what they 02111 a " snap- " position
with a big salary. My advice to such boys
is to get the foolish notion out of their
heads, discard their fancy eTrithes for the
plain ones they should always have been
wearing, and go towork in earn
iest. !
I repeat that it s a great mistake for
young men to get xtravagant notions of
drees into their head. If they are working.
for small salaries they cannot maintain
them honestly. Soo er or later they will*
have to drop some o their finery and lay
themselves open to r dicule by their friends.
The sham pleasure t eir fine clothes i might
give them certainly i not worth the pain of .
such a re -action,
hich the TWENTY YEARS STANDING;
tant and
ed objlect
sV, and
n by the
member -
he Hung
oe open -
but are
name of
uoe.tes as
u
To C re a Cold in One Day.
Take axe,tive Bromo ' Quinine Tablets
All drugg ets refund the money if it fails to
cure. 25 . E. W. Grovets signature is on
each box.
•
Ove --Dressed Young Ailen.
AN 0 D BUSINESS MAN'S OPINONS.
An em.nently successful business man,
discussing the young man of to -day and his
clothes, s ys :
A good many young men think more
about their clothes than about their work.
is dest uction of Jung by a
growl g germ, -precisely as
mould cheese is destri4ction
of che se. by a growing erm.
If y u kill the germl, you
stop th - consumption. You
can or can't, accordin,r to
when ou begin.
Tak Scott's Emulsion of
Cod L ver Oil: take a little
at first.
vie
The genuir
this picture
Lake no othe
a has
n it,
It acts as a.
food; it is the
easiest food.
Seems not to be
food; makes you
hungry; eating
is comfortable.
Yougrow strong-
er. Take more;
not too much; enough is as
much a you like and agrees
with y m. Satisfy htsmger
_with usual food; whatever
you like and agrees with you.
Whei you are strong
again, h ve recovered your
strength --the germs are
dead; y u have killed them.
If you have not tried it, send
for free ample, its agreeable
taste will surprise you.
TT & BOWNE,
Chemists,
$1.00; allTdo o
rrugngtios.ts.
s
Trouble of a 1`torwich Far.3r
who was iZelieved by
Dodd's Kidney Pills.
Nonwien, Nov. 12 -For twenty years,
Mr. Wilbert Woodward, of Willow Dell,
has euffered with backache. He grew so.
bad that he was confined to his bed two,
days out of a week. His farm suffered for
the lack of the eye of its mater, and Mr.
Woodward made every effort to find 4 cure
for his trouble.
He says "1 tried everything i ever
heard of, but no cure. Last fall liheard
about Dodd's Kidney Pale, and I bought
three boxes of them fawn Mr. Banner; of -
Norwick, and I am happy to say they have -
done me more good then all the othermedi-
eines put together, that I got from the doe -
tor. My wife takes bodd's Kidney' Pills
also, for lame back and rheumatism, and
finds them gran, & I hope any pereon Offer-
ing as we did Will try theee remedis.
would willingly-1m.y two dollar:a box rather
than be without Dodd' Kidney Pills in the
house.
•
isdona-
-An idea inituasteadfee awfully lonesome
when it gets into some eople's heads.
-" Yes," sighed the Aberdoniaae,
"money be the root of 11 evil, but moat
people would like a for et."
•-" Does your wife t ke to horticulture ?"
" Yea, indeed ; she gee out every fine day
with the hoe and chops he head off Some,
thing I've planted."
-" Maggie, did you ake that Chicken
broth ?" " Oi did, mu ." " I can't find
it anywhere about wh t did you do with
"Sure an' fhat ilee would I do wid it
but fade it, to the chickens, mum ?"
I would like a job, sir, as waiter,"
said the applicant. " You have had ex-
perience in waiting, I suppose ?" queried
the restaurant, proprietor. " Indeed I
have." "For how long ?" " Why, sir,
I've taken meale• at a restaurant for 12
years."
"Do you think opals are maluelty ?" in-
quired the superstitious man. Yes," was
the reply. "My wife wants one, and it's
going to cost me £10."
--May-" What became of that old flame
of youre ?" Ethel-" Papa put him out."
-Harry-" When I asked her if she
would be mine she fell on my breast and
sobbed like a child, but, finally she put her
arms around my neck and whispered -that
she was mo happy." Harriet-" Yes, that
is what she told me she 'was going to :do.
She has been practicing it with Cousin Tone
for ever and ever so long."
-Some time ago two antiquarians were
having a look around a certain town on the
banks of the claseie Tweed. Going into the
kirkyard they came across Andrew, the
gravedigger, and after some conversation
inquired if there were any epitaphs in the
" acre." Epitaphs 2" said Andrew,
scratching his head. " Epitaphs? Na, I
dinna think there's onybody o' that 'awe
buried here,"
-A Glasgow servant girl went home a
few evenings ago with her head wrappedlup
In a shaw1. Her young mistress asked her
what ailed her, and was told that she wee
suffering from'a bad attack of toothaehe
brought on by Bitting in the park. " But
you ought not to sit on such a cold chilly
night as thie," eaid the mil:tress, "ton
should walk at a smart pace" The girl
looked at her for a moment as though
pitying her ignorance, and then answered—
"You canna coort richt walking; you must
jist sit dome."
-On old Ca.rliele bridge, in Dublin, there
used to be a fruit stall kept by Biddy, the
apple woman, who was a well known gare
to all passers-by. She had a ready tongue,
and never did a verbal opponent retire vvith
all the honore. An American visitor, who
had heard rumors of her akill at fence, one
day took up a water melon displayed for stOre,
and said gravely-" You grow pretty small
apples ever here. In America we have
them twiee this size." Bridget looked 'en,
cooly surveyed the joker from bead to heels,
and replied in a tone of pity-" Ab, what
for should I be yeasting my breath to tate
atoppwleasrnthat takes our gooseberries for
Eve
cons
And,
disea
you
corn
A
cure _
colds
better
of br
lungs;
is mo
cbron
surnpt
11
you s
watch To
ur acutC. I
try bon"
rhetry P
to nrovi
AI
Dec. 14,1
DIST
!.The folio
kr last wed
late.]
Snlioon REt
port of the
school section
and 61 which
teacher: Ent
483. Junior
403 ;
third,- Lnein
484 ;Stewart
iaolly, 291;
third, -Katie
221, Second
Robert Tmalc
Ellen Connell
Patrick Ryat
Part second ab
Eddie Drake
Norman Drak(
Without a,
You can find ots
ranged and (Mesas
lame haek ?
urinating or a too
there) deposits lik3
het stood for 24 hs
symptoms, not a
-Ina Br. Chafe:as 11
ebt kidney -cure.
Ueeti
Council met
=embers were
meeting were r
No. 5, 1900,1ei
per cent. extra.
before Deoemb
and sealed, T
attend to the i
er to the Henn
granted in pay.
to24O63 N
Satenelay,epect
••••••-•
Ring out an ah
is to notify
practiced when
is asked for,
tractor never]
makes no sore
Be sure and ge
ANNIVERsAR
of the Presley'
were held on 8
her 4th and ;
&wen, of Bre
and evening, el
tereeting tier=
joyed by the h
Monday eveni
meeting took
which was gott
great credit on
excellent -cook
After atriple ju
good things tin
STRONG
Every orga
up an
a'fie
AV::110.D."11J
17.:41.!Aq.:i A
Siite
taking
and feel stroee
; Milburn s H-
all diseases
%IN= out uery